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China has recently overtaken the US in the annual production of greenhouse gas emissions.The US is still the leader in the long-termamounts of pollution emitted.
This is not true. Composting REDUCES the amount of garbage, and can, if done properly, reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
Most countries have a government website that is partly or wholly dedicated to the observation and tracking of greenhouse gas emissions on either a national or global scale
We can slow the enhanced (or accelerated) greenhouse effect which is causing global warming by slowing our carbon dioxide emissions and by planting billions of trees.
From 1990 to 2000, the world's most developing economies cut the greenhouse gases emissions from energy production by about 55 percent.
Kyoto protocol....
international law
China has recently overtaken the US in the annual production of greenhouse gas emissions.The US is still the leader in the long-termamounts of pollution emitted.
From "Greenhouse gas emissions: perspectives on the top 20 emitters and developed versus developing nations.", in the 'Per Capita Emissions' section. The website is... http://www.eoearth.org/article/Greenhouse_gas_emissions~_perspectives_on_the_top_20_emitters_and_developed_versus_developing_nations "...Of the top 20 emitters, the highest ranked by per capita greenhouse gas emissions are developed countries (Australia, United States, and Canada, ranked 5, 7, and 9, respectively)." Australia it is!
Reduce greenhouse gas emissions
Greenhouse gas emissions are directly related to global temperature increase and as sea levels rise, many of the Pacific islands will be drowned if global temperatures continue to increase.
they all do when BURNED
China.
Primarily meat production causes a lot of greenhouse gas emissions (methane, nitrous oxide) not to mention the indirect emissions that are released, which of course are bad for the environment. Also it takes a great amount of water to produce 1kg of meat compared to the production of 1kg of grain. The direct land usage for meat production is quite small but the land it takes to grow grain for the livestock is huge.
This is not true. Composting REDUCES the amount of garbage, and can, if done properly, reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
Geetesh Bhardwaj has written: 'Global greenhouse gas emissions' -- subject(s): Greenhouse gases